endowed by private persons, are subject to the
private government of those who erect them; and
therefore, if there be no visitor appointed by
the founder, the law appoints the founder and his
heirs to be visitors, who are to act and proceed
according to the particular laws and constitutions
assigned them by the founder. It is now
admitted on all hands that the founder is patron, and,
as founder, is visitor, if no particular visitor
be assigned; so that patronage and visitation
are necessary consequents one upon another.
For this visitatorial power was not introduced by any
canons or constitutions ecclesiastical (as was
said by a learned gentleman whom I have in my
eye, in his argument of this case); it is an
appointment of law. It ariseth from the property
which the founder had in the lands assigned to
support the charity; and as he is the author
of the charity, the law gives him and his heirs a
visitatorial power, that is, an authority to inspect
the actions and regulate the behavior of the
members that partake of the charity. For
it is fit the members that are endowed, and that have
the charity bestowed upon them, should not be
left to themselves, but pursue the intent and
design of him that bestowed it upon them. Now,
indeed, where the poor, or those that receive the charity,
are not incorporated, but there are certain trustees
who dispose of the charity, there is no visitor,
because the interest of the revenue is not vested
in the poor that have the benefit of the charity,
but they are subject to the orders and directions of
the trustees. But where they who are to enjoy
the benefit of the charity are incorporated,
there to prevent all perverting of the charity,
or to compose differences that may happen among them,
there is by law a visitatorial power; and it being
a creature of the founder’s own, it is
reason that he and his heirs should have that
power, unless by the founder it is vested in some other.
Now there is no manner of difference between
a college and a hospital, except only in degree.
A hospital is for those that are poor, and mean,
and low, and sickly; a college is for another sort
of indigent persons; but it hath another intent,
to study in and breed up persons in the world
that have no otherwise to live; but still it
is as much within the reasons as hospitals. And
if in a hospital the master and poor are incorporated,
it is a college having a common seal to act by,
although it hath not the name of a college (which
always supposeth a corporation), because it is of an
inferior degree; and in the one case and in the
other there must be a visitor, either the founder
and his heirs or one appointed by him; and both
are eleemosynary.”
Lord Holt concludes his whole argument by again repeating, that that college was a private corporation, and that the founder had a right to appoint a visitor, and to give him such power as he saw fit.[18]